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6 résultats trouvés

  1. Bonjour, Quelques photos récentes (ou plus anciennes) de certains changements urbain de ville de Laval. Note: Les images du haut des premiers montages, proviennent de "Google Street View". Le 1699 le corbusier, aout 2011 et 2 juin 2013 Agrandissement de Place Laval, aout 2011 // 2 juin 2013 Station Canadian Tire (boulevard des Laurentides, Pont Viau), septembre et decembre 2012 Le Zellers de Gallerie laval (face au centre laval), aout 2011 // 1ier juin 2013 1968-2005 Boul Levesques, St-Vincent de Paul, Laval. Autoroute13 1976 // 11 aout 2012. Voila pour le moment, j'en ai quelques autres encore....pour la prochaine fois !!
  2. La Place Longueuil dans un projet de rajeunissement de 100 M$ 9 mai 2013 - Elie Despins En vue d’accueillir le détaillant américain Target dans ses centres commerciaux en novembre 2013, le Fonds de placement immobilier Cominar a mis sur la table un projet de rajeunissement de 100 M$. Ce sont La Place Longueuil, la Place Alexis Nihon à Montréal, et le Centre Laval qui en seront bénéficiaire, rapporte La Presse Affaires. La Place Longueuil, dont les besoins de renouveau sont pour le moins criants, aura droit à une véritable cure de rajeunissement d’ici la fin de l’automne. Parmi les travaux qui débuteront en juin; la réfection des corridors et de la foire alimentaire, ainsi que l’ajout de puits de lumière. Les travaux d’agrandissement sont déjà entâmés à l’emplacement de l’ancien magasin à grande surface Zellers, où Target s’y installera dès le mois novembre. Un projet de rénovation et d’agrandissement d'une telle envergure a pour objectif primo d’augmenter les ventes totales « de façon très appréciable », explique Guy Charron, vice-président directeur, exploitation – commerce de détail de Cominar. « Toutes les études prévoient que Target performera mieux que Zellers ». Cominar désire faire bondir l’achalandage dans ces centres commerciaux, qui font face, entre autres, à la popularité croissante du magasinage en ligne. « Pour contrebalancer l’internet, affirme Guy Charron, il faut offrir du nouveau et surprendre les clients. Il faut investir pour que nos centres commerciaux soient des milieux de vie, pas uniquement des lieux de passage. […] On investit pour améliorer la performance de nos centres commerciaux et pour la maintenir. » Cominar n’a pas voulu dévoiler de quelle façon sera réparti les 100 millions parmi les trois centres commerciaux visés, ni la proportion à payée par ses locataires.
  3. La Presse Canadienne . les affaires.com . 14-06-2012 (modifié le 14-06-2012 à 11:57) Québec solidaire a déposé jeudi, à l'Assemblée nationale, une pétition portant 3330 signatures qui vise à protéger les employés des magasins Zellers, la chaîne dont plusieurs magasins porteront bientôt la bannière Target. L'acquisition de plus de 35 magasins Zellers au Québec par la chaîne américaine Target pourrait causer la perte de plus de 5000 emplois en 2012, très majoritairement occupés par des femmes. Target prétend n'avoir aucune obligation de respecter l'ancienneté, les salaires et les avantages sociaux des anciens employés de Zellers, ou de les reprendre à son emploi. Le député de Québec solidaire, Amir Khadir, croit que Target contourne l'article 96 de la Loi sur les normes du travail du Québec qui protège les salariés lorsque les entreprises qui les emploient changent de propriétaire. Il reproche à Target d'affirmer que sa reprise des magasins Zellers ne serait en fait qu'une transaction immobilière. Il réclame donc l'intervention de la ministre du Travail, Lise Thériault. Avec des affaires comme ca, ne venez pas me dire qu'on est a droite au Quebec...
  4. Can Richard Baker reinvent The Bay? MARINA STRAUSS From Monday's Globe and Mail NEW YORK — Richard Baker, the new owner of retailer Hudson's Bay Co.,mingled with the New York fashion elite as the lights dimmed for designer Peter Som's recent show, offering opinions and taking a close look at the latest in skirts and dresses. It's a stark contrast to previous HBC owner Jerry Zucker, who HBC insiders had a hard time picturing with fashionistas in New York. But Mr. Baker, who made his name in real estate, knows it is time for a new approach at the struggling retailer. “As an entrepreneur I'm not necessarily fixated on how things were done in the past,” says Mr. Baker. “We function and we think much more like a specialty retailer rather than a department store retailer. A specialty retailer is much more nimble and willing to adjust to the environment than department stores, historically. Department stores, frankly, haven't changed a whole lot in 100 years.” His Purchase, N.Y.-based equity firm, NRDC Equity Partners, has snapped up a string of dusty retailers, among them HBC's underperforming Bay and Zellers. The Bay operates in the department store sector which is on the wane, squeezed for years by specialty and discount chains. Zellers struggles in a low-priced arena dominated by behemoth Wal-Mart Canada Corp. The need for a makeover is clear: The Bay's sales per square foot are estimated at merely $142, and Zellers', $149 – a fraction of the estimated $480 at Wal-Mart Canada. At Lord & Taylor, which also lags some of its key U.S. rivals in productivity, Mr. Baker has had some success in its efforts to return to its high end Americana roots. But the 47-store chain is feeling the pinch of tight-fisted consumers and, late last month, he unveiled a shakeup at the top ranks of his firm's $8-billion (U.S.) a year retail businesses to try to shave costs. Still, he is pouring money into the chains in other ways, quickly distinguishing himself from Mr. Zucker, who died last spring. While the former owner had named himself CEO despite his lack of merchandising experience, the new owner has handpicked a team of seasoned merchants at the senior levels of his retailers. And while Mr. Zucker shunned publicity and focused on more mundane, although critical, matters, such as technology to track customer demand, Mr. Baker enjoys the limelight. Now he is betting on the fragile fashion sector as an engine of growth. Last fall he set up Creative Design Studios (CDS) to develop designer lines for Lord & Taylor, now, HBC and, eventually, retailers around the world. Mr. Baker is “looking at every one of the properties with a different viewpoint,” says Walter Loeb, a former member of HBC's board of directors and a consultant at Loeb Associates in New York. “He has new ideas. He doesn't want to keep Hudson's Bay in its present form.” Nevertheless, “this team has taken over a not particularly healthy business,” says Marvin Traub, a former executive at Bloomingdale's who runs consultancy Marvin Traub Associates in New York. “They know and understand the challenges. It will take some time to fix them.” What Mr. Baker looks for in retailers is faded brands that have the potential to be revived. Early this year, NRDC acquired Fortunoff, an insolvent jewellery and home décor chain. The synergies among NRDC's various retailers are tremendous, says Gilbert Harrison, chairman of New York investment bank Financo Inc., which advises Mr. Baker. So is the value of the real estate. At HBC, it is estimated to be worth $1.2-billion, according to industry insiders. That's just a little more than the equivalent purchase price of the retailer itself. Lord & Taylor's real estate was valued at $1.7-billion (U.S.) when Mr. Baker acquired the company in 2006 – about $500-million more than he bought it for. “Initially I thought, good luck,” says Mr. Gilbert. “He's bought this in one of the most difficult retail environments that we've seen for 20 or 30 years. … “But he's protected his downside because the basic real estate values of Lord & Taylor and, now Hudson's Bay, certainly help prevent tragedy.” Mr. Baker likes to tell the story of buying Lord & Taylor for its real estate, and then on the way to signing the deal noticed how well the stores were performing. Like most other U.S. retailers, Lord & Taylor has seen business slow down recently. But its transformation to appeal to the well heeled had begun even before Mr. Baker arrived. It had dropped an array of tired brands, such as Tommy Hilfiger and Nautica, and picked up trendier labels, among them Coach and Tracy Reese. Mr. Baker encouraged the strategy of expanding and upgrading higher margin designer handbags and footwear. Ditto for denim wear and funky styles in the women's “contemporary” section under hot labels such as Free People and Diesel. “My job is to understand that we need to get the best brands in the store.” But he also saw the opportunity to bolster margins by stocking affordable lines in the form of CDS brands, with a focus now on Black Brown 1826 men's wear line. “I thought there was a void in the market for exactly the kind of clothes that my friends and I wear, at a right price. Why should we pay $150 for a dress shirt?” he asks, holding up one for $69. Now Mr. Baker wants to borrow a leaf from the Lord & Taylor playbook for HBC. He wants to introduce better quality products with higher margins, and plans to add his design studio merchandise to the stores early next year. Besides the details, he sees a whole new concept for the big Bay department stores. It would entail shrinking the Bay, possibly introducing Lord & Taylor within the stores, and adding Zellers in the basement and Fortunoff jewellery departments upstairs, with office space at the top. Lord & Taylor would serve to fill a gap in the retail landscape between the Bay and carriage trade Holt Renfrew, he says. For discounter Zellers, he seems to take inspiration from Target Corp., the fashionable U.S. discounter, by putting more focus on branded apparel. But he's not averse to selling parts of the business, or real estate, if the right offer came along either. “We're always available to sell things at the right price, or buy things at the right price.”
  5. Ce vétéran du commerce de détail qui a travaillé pour Loblaw et Canadian Tire devient PDG des magasins Zellers. Pour en lire plus...
  6. NRDC Equity buys Hudson's Bay MARINA STRAUSS Globe and Mail Update July 16, 2008 at 1:32 PM EDT Upscale U.S. department store chain Lord & Taylor is about set up shop in Canada. The company that owns Lord & Taylor bought Hudson's Bay Co. on Wednesday and will convert up to 15 of its key Bay department stores to the U.S. retailer's name. The move marries the two oldest department store retailers in North America, and will create an $8-billion (U.S.) merchandising powerhouse for the new buyer, NRDC Equity Partners of Purchase, N.Y. It will combine HBC's Bay, Zellers, Home Outfitters and Fields chains with NRDC's Lord & Taylor and Fortunoff, the jewellery and home decor chain. “By acquiring Hudson's Bay Co. along with previous acquisitions Lord & Taylor and Fortunoff, we will have an unprecedented opportunity to recreate the retail landscape in North America,” said Richard Baker, chief executive officer of NRDC. The newly expanded holding company will be called Hudson's Bay Trading Co. “Enormous potential exists by upgrading the offerings at both the Bay and Zellers and by bringing Lord & Taylor, Fortunoff and CDS into the mix.” CDS, or Creative Design Studios, produces fashion lines. The deal, for an undisclosed amount, comes just three months after the death of Jerry Zucker, the South Carolina businessman who acquired HBC in early 2006 for $1.1-billion and took it private. Mr. Zucker began to make changes at the chains, moving the Bay more upscale and adding new brands to the mix, while renovating Zellers stores and expanding Fields. Last summer, he appointed his chief lieutenant, Robert Johnston, as president of HBC. He was promoted to chief executive officer in April and succeeded Mr. Zucker on his death. Now Mr. Baker, who becomes the 38th governor, or chairman, of HBC, is investing $500-million into the combined new company and is set to put his own stamp on the retailer. Mr. Baker is already familiar with HBC, having sat on its board of directors since 2006. NRDC owns what is believed to be about 20 per cent of HBC. He said in a statement he plans to convert the Bay's most high-profile 10 to 15 stores to Lord & Taylor. It's a high-end U.S. fashion department store chain that was bought by Mr. Baker's holding company in 2006 and has since enjoyed a turnaround under his watch. It has also moved to more high-end fashions after closing some of its weaker outlets, leaving it with 47 stores. HBC has about 580 outlets in all. Lord & Taylor will serve to fill a gap in the Canadian retail landscape between the Bay and the carriage trade Holt Renfrew, Mr. Baker said. He wants to put greater focus on branded apparel at discounter Zellers, he said. He plans to improve its customer service and, in the future, roll out new 125,000-square-foot prototype stores. He will also bring Fortunoff to Canada, both as standalone stores and within the Bay. And he wants to expand NRDC's Creative Design Studios, selling its branded collections throughout North America and internationally. Its brands include Peter Som's eponymous collection as well as the Kate http://www.reportonbusiness.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080716.whbcstaff0716/BNStory/Business/home
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